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Travel Postcard: 48 hours in Tokyo
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-10-30 14:41

Travel Postcard: 48 hours in Tokyo

A light display of the Milky Way is reflected on a window as skyscrapers and the Tokyo Bay area are seen in background from a viewing deck of Tokyo Tower July 5, 2009.[Agencies]

TOKYO - Bustling and beguiling -- Tokyo is one of the world's biggest, and most influential, cities and a place where old and new sit easily side by side.

Reuters correspondents with local knowledge help visitors to the Japanese capital get the most out of a short stay.

FRIDAY

1 p.m. - Start with some traditional spirituality -- the Buddhist temple of Senso-ji, in the old downtown quarter of Asakusa, has stood on the same spot for over a thousand years. Wander down Nakamise-dori shopping street toward the main temple, stopping to try the delicious sembei rice crackers. When you reach the large smoke-engulfed bronze cauldron in front of the temple, do as the locals do and rub the smoke billowing out from incense sticks against your body for good health.

2 p.m. - Lunch at Edokko (meaning child of Edo - the old name for Tokyo), a famous restaurant serving the Asakusa district's specialty of tempura. Be sure to try the shrimp.

3 p.m. - A few stops away on the train is Tokyo's world-famous electronics district, Akihabara. Value for money depends on the exchange rate but its cutting edge technology that you're really looking for - gadgets that the rest of the world won't get for another 12 months. Explore the back streets as well as the main road. This is where you'll find the otaku, Japanese uber-nerds whose lives revolve around comic books and computers.

6 p.m. - Time to head across town to another Tokyo landmark, the New York Bar at the Park Hyatt Hotel in Shinjuku (tokyo.park.hyatt.com). Famed for its incredible views of the city, this is where Bill Murray met Scarlett Johansson in the movie "Lost in Translation."

8 p.m. - From the lofty heights of the Park Hyatt to the backstreets of Shinjuku station for dinner. Omoide-yokocho is a narrow alley crammed full of yakitori or grilled chicken skewer restaurants where you can sit and soak up the atmosphere with a bottle of sake. The reflection of the surrounding neon signs in the puddles of the alley apparently inspired the set design of Ridley Scott's movie "Blade Runner."

10 p.m. - Head across the street to another set of backstreet alleyways collectively known as Golden Gai. This maze of ramshackle wooden drinking dens will transport you back to 1950s Tokyo when artists and revolutionaries plotted the downfall of the government over bottles of whisky.

12 a.m. - Emboldened by your liquid intake at the bars, head for the many karaoke boxes lining Yasakuni-dori main street. Enter your own private room and unleash the rock star within.

SATURDAY

5 a.m. - Now, either you called it a night at a sensible hour or you're still awake -- either way its time to visit one the fish market at Tsukiji. Tsukiji is the world's biggest wholesale fish market handling more than 700,000 tonnes of produce a year and employing over 60,000 people. Get there for the dramatic tuna auction that starts at 5:15 a.m.

7 a.m. - The auctions start to wind down now so explore the labyrinthine network of stalls selling over 400 different types of seafood. Foodies might want to head to the kitchen supplies section and pick up a knife or two from Aritsugu, who have been making prized handcrafted knives since 1560.

8 a.m. - As the furor of the market begins to die down, its time to grab some breakfast. Breakfast at Tsukiji of course has to be sushi. One of a number of small restaurants inside the market itself, Daiwa, is rated by many as the best place in the world. Try the line-caught tuna from the Japanese town of Oma, washed down with green tea and miso soup.

10 a.m. - After breakfast, visit Roppongi Hills (www.roppongihills.com/en/) - a futuristic urban planning concept built by the Donald Trump of Tokyo, Minoru Mori. Fourteen years in the making, this shopping, dining and entertainment complex is modern Tokyo at its finest. At the top of the 54-storey Mori Tower is the Mori Art Museum. Marvel at the panoramic views of the city whilst appreciating the latest exhibitions in what is Mori's attempt to bring modern art to the masses.

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